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**** Elections thread *****

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  1. #5176
    a500lbgorilla's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by wufwugy View Post


    Nope. Nothing to see here. What next, boss?

    https://np.reddit.com/r/politics/com...ttack/dd9vxo2/

    "1980s Soviets knew that their government was lying to them about the strength and power of their society, the Communist Party couldn't hide all of the dysfunctions people saw on a daily basis. This didn't stop the Soviet leadership from lying. Instead, they just accused the West of being equally deceptive. "Sure, things might be bad here, but they are just as bad in America, and in America people are actually foolish enough to believe in the lie! Not like you, clever people. You get it. You know it is a lie."


    Trump's supporters don't care about being lied to. You can point out the lies until you're blue in the face, but it makes no difference to them. Why? Because it is just a game to them. The media lies, bloggers lie, politicians lie, it's just all a bunch of lies."
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  2. #5177
    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    He's mostly right and Trump agrees.
  3. #5178
    Quote Originally Posted by ImSavy View Post
    My money is on Trump losing but he says he wins and you agree.
    You're priming yourself to wrongly analyze things I say.

    From what I've seen so far, it looks like the Trump administration is right, but with the law, you never know.
  4. #5179
    Jack Sawyer's Avatar
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    Cogito ergo sum

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    Hey, I'm in a movie!
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  5. #5180
    Quote Originally Posted by Jack Sawyer View Post
    Iadarola's understanding of the Great Recession is non-existent. The crafters of Dodd-Frank's understanding of the Great Recession is close to non-existent.
  6. #5181
    Looks like Kellyanne has had enough. I wonder if she will keep in the spotlight to keep people harping on something nobody cares about.
  7. #5182
    This rule is a wonderful example of well-intended regulations put in place by people who don't understand economics that create unintended consequences that make the economy less robust and contribute to financial crises. The Fiduciary Rule is a bad idea.
  8. #5183
    Quote Originally Posted by a500lbgorilla View Post
    https://np.reddit.com/r/politics/com...ttack/dd9vxo2/

    "1980s Soviets knew that their government was lying to them about the strength and power of their society, the Communist Party couldn't hide all of the dysfunctions people saw on a daily basis. This didn't stop the Soviet leadership from lying. Instead, they just accused the West of being equally deceptive. "Sure, things might be bad here, but they are just as bad in America, and in America people are actually foolish enough to believe in the lie! Not like you, clever people. You get it. You know it is a lie."


    Trump's supporters don't care about being lied to. You can point out the lies until you're blue in the face, but it makes no difference to them. Why? Because it is just a game to them. The media lies, bloggers lie, politicians lie, it's just all a bunch of lies."
    What are you referring to?
  9. #5184
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    Quote Originally Posted by wufwugy View Post
    This rule is a wonderful example of well-intended regulations put in place by people who don't understand economics that create unintended consequences that make the economy less robust and contribute to financial crises. The Fiduciary Rule is a bad idea.

    What are you saying wuf? We should not have any regulation for anything that has to do with the financial industry?
    My dream... is to fly... over the rainbow... so high...


    Cogito ergo sum

    VHS is like a book? and a book is like a stack of kindles.
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  10. #5185
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    Quote Originally Posted by wufwugy View Post
    What are you referring to?
    He's referring to the fact that trump's supporters don't care about being lied to. Because it's all a game in which basically everyone lies. That facts don't matter anymore and that KellyAnne was on to something.
    My dream... is to fly... over the rainbow... so high...


    Cogito ergo sum

    VHS is like a book? and a book is like a stack of kindles.
    Hey, I'm in a movie!
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fYdwe3ArFWA
  11. #5186
    Quote Originally Posted by Jack Sawyer View Post
    He's referring to the fact that trump's supporters don't care about being lied to. Because it's all a game in which basically everyone lies. That facts don't matter anymore and that KellyAnne was on to something.
    What was she onto?
  12. #5187
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    Quote Originally Posted by wufwugy View Post
    What was she onto?
    You got three chances, go ahead, guess.



    What was she onto?
    My dream... is to fly... over the rainbow... so high...


    Cogito ergo sum

    VHS is like a book? and a book is like a stack of kindles.
    Hey, I'm in a movie!
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fYdwe3ArFWA
  13. #5188
    Quote Originally Posted by Jack Sawyer View Post
    What are you saying wuf? We should not have any regulation for anything that has to do with the financial industry?
    What I'm saying is that the Fiduciary Rule needlessly makes non-financial-advisers need to meet a requirement of financial adviser. The differentiation exists for a reason. Going into the details of why this creates more problems than it solves is a lengthy and complex task.
  14. #5189
    Quote Originally Posted by Jack Sawyer View Post
    You got three chances, go ahead, guess.



    What was she onto?
    I really don't know what this is about. She said something silly and of little consequence. She was immediately called on it and she corrected.
  15. #5190
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    Quote Originally Posted by wufwugy View Post
    What I'm saying is that the Fiduciary Rule needlessly makes non-financial-advisers need to meet a requirement of financial adviser. The differentiation exists for a reason. Going into the details of why this creates more problems than it solves is a lengthy and complex task.
    If you can, please do. I'm genuinely interested as to why
    My dream... is to fly... over the rainbow... so high...


    Cogito ergo sum

    VHS is like a book? and a book is like a stack of kindles.
    Hey, I'm in a movie!
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fYdwe3ArFWA
  16. #5191
    Quote Originally Posted by wufwugy View Post
    You're priming yourself to wrongly analyze things I say.

    From what I've seen so far, it looks like the Trump administration is right, but with the law, you never know.
    You think I put more effort into this subject than I do. My source of US politics is essentially FTR.
  17. #5192
    Quote Originally Posted by Jack Sawyer View Post
    If you can, please do. I'm genuinely interested as to why
    By making non-financial-advisers in the finance profession need to meet a standard of financial advisers, it increases the cost of being in the finance profession yet not a financial adviser. This makes it so that in the future there will be fewer non-financial-advisers in the finance profession as well as fewer cheaper services in finance. Consumers of financial services will ultimately end up worse off because the cost of purchasing financial services will increase. Think of it this way: people who can afford financial advisers buy them, but people who cannot may only get some measure of input from non-advisers. With the Fiduciary Rule, that goes away; people who can't afford the cost associated with the Fiduciary Rule will get even less of an understanding of their finances than before.

    Compliance with the rule would itself be very hard, perhaps even impossible. It depends on who it covers. A powerful rule would go a long way towards turning the finance profession into something that only wealthy people can get into, as well as only wealthy can consume.

    The core cause of financial crises is something called 'asymmetric information" (made up of adverse selection and moral hazard). The goal of financial regulation is to reduce asymmetric information (even though it often does the opposite). A way in which this would probably increase asymmetric information is by the moral hazard caused by consumers overvaluing non-financial-advisers' statements than they otherwise would. Right now, it is common knowledge that an insurance broker is not a financial adviser, but if the Fiduciary Rule is enacted, the distinction would dissipate to a high degree and consumers would be more likely to think that listening to the financial claims of an insurance broker is just as good as from an actual financial adviser.
  18. #5193
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    Quote Originally Posted by wufwugy View Post
    By making non-financial-advisers in the finance profession need to meet a standard of financial advisers, it increases the cost of being in the finance profession yet not a financial adviser. This makes it so that in the future there will be fewer non-financial-advisers in the finance profession as well as fewer cheaper services in finance. Consumers of financial services will ultimately end up worse off because the cost of purchasing financial services will increase. Think of it this way: people who can afford financial advisers buy them, but people who cannot may only get some measure of input from non-advisers. With the Fiduciary Rule, that goes away; people who can't afford the cost associated with the Fiduciary Rule will get even less of an understanding of their finances than before.

    Compliance with the rule would itself be very hard, perhaps even impossible. It depends on who it covers. A powerful rule would go a long way towards turning the finance profession into something that only wealthy people can get into, as well as only wealthy can consume.

    The core cause of financial crises is something called 'asymmetric information" (made up of adverse selection and moral hazard). The goal of financial regulation is to reduce asymmetric information (even though it often does the opposite). A way in which this would probably increase asymmetric information is by the moral hazard caused by consumers overvaluing non-financial-advisers' statements than they otherwise would. Right now, it is common knowledge that an insurance broker is not a financial adviser, but if the Fiduciary Rule is enacted, the distinction would dissipate to a high degree and consumers would be more likely to think that listening to the financial claims of an insurance broker is just as good as from an actual financial adviser.
    Ok, costs. But it honestly sounds like exactly that which I am looking for. From investopedia:

    The Department of Labor’s definition of a fiduciary demands that advisors act in the best interests of their clients, and to put their clients' interests above their own. It leaves no room for advisors to conceal any potential conflict of interest, and states that all fees and commissions must be clearly disclosed in dollar form to clients. The definition has been expanded to include any professional making a recommendation or solicitation — and not simply giving ongoing advice. Previously, only advisors who were charging a fee for service (either hourly or as a percentage of account holdings) on retirement plans were considered fiduciaries.

    Advisors who wish to continue working on commission will need to provide clients with a disclosure agreement, called a Best Interest Contract Exemption (BICE), in circumstances where a conflict of interest could exist (such as, the advisor receiving a higher commission or special bonus for selling a certain product). This is to guarantee that the advisor is working unconditionally in the best interest of the client. All compensation that is paid to the fiduciary must be clearly spelled out as well.
    Should we not be protected from our own stupidity a all times? Particularly when it comes to financial matters?

    As you might imagine, I'm looking out for the general public in all cases.
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    Cogito ergo sum

    VHS is like a book? and a book is like a stack of kindles.
    Hey, I'm in a movie!
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  19. #5194
    Quote Originally Posted by Jack Sawyer View Post
    Ok, costs. But it honestly sounds like exactly that which I am looking for. From investopedia:



    Should we not be protected from our own stupidity a all times? Particularly when it comes to financial matters?

    As you might imagine, I'm looking out for the general public in all cases.
    I get it. The rule is an attempt to reduce asymmetric information.

    I doubt I could convince you that it's a bad idea. Just know that there are a lot of economists who think this type of rule is a bad idea. Economists are actually all over the place on this stuff, because it's so complex and observations are not rigorous enough that economists can get their PhDs by making antipodal cases on this topic. The economists I side with are the ones who don't contradict economic principles in the cases they make. Using government regulation to correct for asymmetric information is largely a political idea, and it has a terrible track record of actually working. Very key asymmetric information caused by regulation can be pointed at regarding the causes of the Great Recession (and the Great Depression and others).
  20. #5195
  21. #5196
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    Quote Originally Posted by wufwugy View Post
    I really don't know what this is about. She said something silly and of little consequence. She was immediately called on it and she corrected.

    Alternative facts, of course.That's what she was onto, in context of rilla's post
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    Cogito ergo sum

    VHS is like a book? and a book is like a stack of kindles.
    Hey, I'm in a movie!
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  22. #5197
    ^^Do you think she meant to say the wrong thing?



    On the topic of "alternate facts," why is that considered bad? There are tons of facts. When one person focuses on one subset of facts, providing a different subset of facts makes them "alternate facts."
  23. #5198
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    ^Um no, there's just facts, and various degrees of bullshit. Alternative facts fall unequivocally in the latter.
    Our brains have just one scale, and we resize our experiences to fit.

  24. #5199
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    Quote Originally Posted by wufwugy View Post
    ^^Do you think she meant to say the wrong thing?



    On the topic of "alternate facts," why is that considered bad? There are tons of facts. When one person focuses on one subset of facts, providing a different subset of facts makes them "alternate facts."
    When you highlight some facts and lowlight others, you're creating a narrative.

    It comes down to a value call. Do you want facts to guide you, or do you want to guide the facts?
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  25. #5200
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    http://www.uscourts.gov/cameras-cour...-j-trump-et-al

    It's pretty cool they're putting stuff like this on the internet now.
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  26. #5201
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    Quote Originally Posted by wufwugy View Post
    What are you referring to?
    Your link says the media is an aspect of some centralized propaganda machine and I thought the reverse-cargo cult idea was apt.

    "... but they're making stuff up too, and at least we're clever enough to see it."
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  27. #5202
    Quote Originally Posted by CoccoBill View Post
    ^Um no, there's just facts, and various degrees of bullshit. Alternative facts fall unequivocally in the latter.
    It's like what Rilla said. When you present a subset of facts, you're not presenting all the facts.

    This is essentially what goes on when people argue past each other. There are sooooooooooo many relevant facts to each society-level issue. When people make a case, they pick the few they want to use the most. Then another person counters with alternative facts. Neither are presenting a full set of facts; instead theyre presenting a narrow subset of the whole.

    This largely hinges on bad reporting. CNN took one fact and extrapolated it to the whole and made a judgment of the inauguration based on it. The counter came by taking different facts and extrapolating them to the whole. Both are wrong.
  28. #5203
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    Alternative facts á la Spicer/Conway ("largest audience to ever witness an inauguration — period — both in person and around the globe.") are not a subset of facts, they're just not facts. If the statement had been true, there'd be no need to call them alternative facts, they'd just be facts.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inaugu...ump#Crowd_size
    Our brains have just one scale, and we resize our experiences to fit.

  29. #5204
    Quote Originally Posted by CoccoBill View Post
    Alternative facts á la Spicer/Conway ("largest audience to ever witness an inauguration — period — both in person and around the globe.") are not a subset of facts, they're just not facts. If the statement had been true, there'd be no need to call them alternative facts, they'd just be facts.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inaugu...ump#Crowd_size
    Agreed. The word 'fact' in that phrase is a misnomer, because the 'alternative facts' aren't facts at all, they're falsehoods.

    There's a difference between 1) picking and choosing which facts to present, and 2) making shit up and calling it some kind of 'facts'. The latter is much further down the greasy pole than the former.
  30. #5205
    TV viewership for Obama in '09, 18 networks, 17.06M. Trump in '17: 12 networks, 16.63M. Barry was on six more stations and barely got half a million extra viewers. The technology, quality, and availability of online streams, and international television broadcasts are undeniably improved over the last 8 years. It seems inconceivable that amount of access, plus the increase in population over that time, wouldn't tilt the numbers in Trump's favor if it were able to be counted. It's something that makes obvious sense, and cannot be refuted with data, because the data doesn't exist. But, any reasonable person could deduce that Spicer's insistence that Trump's was the "most watched" is most probably true. Alternative facts = common sense.

    Why is this even still a problem for anyone? Is this cause Conway said "massacre"? Is this what's gonna happen every time someone in the executive branch stumbles over vocabulary? We're gonna dredge up every literal misstep everyone's ever made and call it an agenda of lies?
  31. #5206
    I wonder if the judge halting Trump's travel ban will calm people down at all. I mean, haven't people been worried shitless that he's gonna start a war, or throw out all the muslims, or make it so women can't have jobs?

    I think anyone who's claimed fear over "fascism" needs to take a deep breath and rest easy knowing that your 3-branch system of checks and balances is still alive and well.
  32. #5207
    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    TV viewership for Obama in '09, 18 networks, 17.06M. Trump in '17: 12 networks, 16.63M. Barry was on six more stations and barely got half a million extra viewers.
    Whoever watches can only watch on one station at a time. The number of people who are going to watch it are going to pick one of the stations, not several. So that argument means nothing.



    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    But, any reasonable person could deduce that Spicer's insistence that Trump's was the "most watched" is most probably true. Alternative facts = common sense.
    'Probably' is an opinion, not a fact. A fact is when you can point to a valid number, not just make a guess. He insisted on his version of reality with no facts to back it up. Thus, alternative facts = asserting things with no evidence = bullshitting.
  33. #5208
    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    I think anyone who's claimed fear over "fascism" needs to take a deep breath and rest easy knowing that your 3-branch system of checks and balances is still alive and well.
    Is this supposed to be an argument for supporting Trump? That no matter what shit he tries to pull someone somewhere can stop him? 'Cause you're not selling me here.
  34. #5209
    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    Is this supposed to be an argument for supporting Trump? That no matter what shit he tries to pull someone somewhere can stop him? 'Cause you're not selling me here.
    It's not an argument for or against Trump. I'm saying it pretty much dispels the myths that the Anti-Trump crowd has used to fear-monger
  35. #5210
    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    It's not an argument for or against Trump. I'm saying it pretty much dispels the myths that the Anti-Trump crowd has used to fear-monger
    The 'myth' was that he would try to impose a bunch of laws people didn't want. The fact that the most egregious of these was stopped (at least temporarily) doesn't remove the danger of him trying.
  36. #5211
    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    The 'myth' was that he would try to impose a bunch of laws people didn't want. The fact that the most egregious of these was stopped (at least temporarily) doesn't remove the danger of him trying.
    See bolded. Alternative facts.

    If everyone hates his ideas so much....how did he become President??
  37. #5212
    This little gem pretty much says all there is to know about Trump and his supporters' mentality

    Any negative polls are fake news,
    So, any evidence that his policies are unpopular is fake. Therefore all of his policies are popular. Because he says so.

    Fail, Donald. Fail.
  38. #5213
    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    See bolded. Alternative facts.

    If everyone hates his ideas so much....how did he become President??
    I didn't say everyone. But where are all the people marching in support of the ban? If it were popular and people really wanted it, why aren't they vocal about it like the opposition is?

    It also seems quite likely that, like so many Trumpers have said, they believed he should be taken seriously but not literally. I think a lot of them never thought he would go through with a lot of his crazier sounding ideas. Now they're seeing the light.
  39. #5214
    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    It also seems quite likely that, like so many Trumpers have said, they believed he should be taken seriously but not literally. I think a lot of them never thought he would go through with a lot of his crazier sounding ideas. Now they're seeing the light.
    You could probably say that in regards to his statements regarding punishment for women who get abortions. That was an off the cuff statement that was clearly not well thought out. And most people believe that his pro-life stance is mostly just lip-service to the evangelical base.

    But if you thought this guy wasn't gonna come out gun's blazin in regards to immigration and national security.....you probably spend too much time with your face on a bong.
  40. #5215
    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    Where are all the people marching in support of the ban?
    They're at work

    EDIT: I'll bet many of them are intimidated. The UC Berkely episode is a perfect example, but far from a solitary incident. Who would go out there and hold a sign for the travel ban when it means masked trouble makers will throw rocks and bottles at you with impunity. The police don't seem interested in arresting people who start violence.

    Also, they're probably not all that passionate about a 3 month pause. This isn't really a policy that is going to steer our national history down any dark path. It's 3 months, chill out!! It's the other side that thinks every little move Trump makes is a giant leap toward a totalitarian regime.
    Last edited by BananaStand; 02-06-2017 at 10:43 AM.
  41. #5216
    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    You could probably say that in regards to his statements regarding punishment for women who get abortions. That was an off the cuff statement that was clearly not well thought out. And most people believe that his pro-life stance is mostly just lip-service to the evangelical base.

    But if you thought this guy wasn't gonna come out gun's blazin in regards to immigration and national security.....you probably spend too much time with your face on a bong.
    I don't spend any time with my face in a bong. So fuck off with the ad hominen shit already.

    How should people know which of his statements are meant to be serious and which aren't? Not everyone has the clear insight into his mind that you appear to have. Most of us just go by whatever shit comes out of his mouth.
  42. #5217
    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    They're at work
    Right, at work all day every day. Weekends too.

    Face it, he's yugely unpopular, you backed a loser.
  43. #5218
    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post

    Also, they're probably not all that passionate about a 3 month pause.
    So they all voted for him, they support him, but they're too scared to organise and support him. Sure.
  44. #5219
    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    I don't spend any time with my face in a bong. So fuck off with the ad hominen shit already..
    Relax, don't take hyperbole so personally.

    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    How should people know which of his statements are meant to be serious and which aren't? Not everyone has the clear insight into his mind that you appear to have. Most of us just go by whatever shit comes out of his mouth.
    I don't know what to tell you here except to just use common sense. If it's ambiguous to you which issues Donald Trump is passionate about, then you probably aren't paying enough attention. And I really think you're overblowing the number of people who said "aaah he's not serious about that". I'm pretty sure most of his supporters voted for him because they believe he's a 'straight talker' who says what he means and means what he says.

    It sounds like you're trying to say that Trump got elected by people who thought he was full of shit, but thought Hillary was full of more shit. Sure that's a slice of the pie, but where are you getting this idea that the majority of people thought Trump would do a 180 on all of this promises?
  45. #5220
    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    So they all voted for him, they support him, but they're too scared to organise and support him. Sure.
    What planet are you living on? His supporters DID organize, unite, and speak loudly and publicly in support of Donald Trump and his policies.

    It was on November 8th, 2016, and the 15 months leading up to that date.

    Now, because liberals don't like the results, we have to fight it out in the streets?
  46. #5221
    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    Right, at work all day every day. Weekends too.

    Face it, he's yugely unpopular, you backed a loser.
    A loser who won? That's some alternative facts right there my friend.

    And maybe some of us choose to make our voices heard in ways that actually matter instead of screaming on a street corner like hysterical idiots. Your local and regional newspapers publish editorials submitted by readers. Your senator or congressman will read the letters you send them.
  47. #5222
    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    Relax, don't take hyperbole so personally.
    Stick to the argument and don't be insulting and I promise I won't tell you to fuck off again.



    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    I don't know what to tell you here except to just use common sense. If it's ambiguous to you which issues Donald Trump is passionate about, then you probably aren't paying enough attention. And I really think you're overblowing the number of people who said "aaah he's not serious about that". I'm pretty sure most of his supporters voted for him because they believe he's a 'straight talker' who says what he means and means what he says.
    There's a difference between saying bombastic things and meaning them, and saying bombastic things for effect.

    No-one who's been paying attention can seriously believe Trump means everything the says. It's not just about using 'common sense' to parse out when he's sincere from when he's not. If that were true, none of his supporters would be upset that he's giving Hillary a pass. Obviously some of them believed that 'lock her up' stuff was sincere.

    Basically, you're trying to let Trump have his cake and eat it too. He can declare anything and if he follows through with it, he's keeping a promise. If he doesn't, well, no-one with common sense would think he really meant that particular thing to be taken seriously.

    It's not the public's job to try to decode when to take a president seriously or not. It'd be so much easier for him to just say what he means, don't you think?


    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    It sounds like you're trying to say that Trump got elected by people who thought he was full of shit, but thought Hillary was full of more shit. Sure that's a slice of the pie, but where are you getting this idea that the majority of people thought Trump would do a 180 on all of this promises?
    You're making up things I never said, or at the very least exaggerating my meaning to the point of absurdity.

    Until you start arguing with what I actually say, this isn't going to go anywhere.
  48. #5223
    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    Until you start arguing with what I actually say, this isn't going to go anywhere.
    Well excuse me if I just don't see your point. Yes, there is a difference between candidate Trump and President Trump. Welcome to American politics. I don't see why that shocks or offends anyone. It happened plenty with all 44 previous presidents, so why is it such a crime when Trump does it too.

    It's merely a symptom of prioritizing an infinite agenda. A problem faced by every president, ever.

    No-one who's been paying attention can seriously believe Trump means everything the says. It's not just about using 'common sense' to parse out when he's sincere from when he's not. If that were true, none of his supporters would be upset that he's giving Hillary a pass. Obviously some of them believed that 'lock her up' stuff was sincere.
    You can't please all of the people all of the time. If anyone is having their cake and eating it too, it's the folks trying to push this narrative that impugns Trump for not doing everything he said, exactly the way he said it. They want a moderate president, but they criticize Trump for being moderate.

    Obama promised to end wars in the middle east. We're still there. He promised to close Gitmo, it's still open. He promised comprehensive health care reform. It was written in sand, and is poised to be washed away by the tide in the next 6 months. Obama made progress on all of those things, but clearly fell short of the goal.

    This is the liberal bias. Obama can show partial results, or make excuses, or blame republicans. Trump is afforded no such luxuries. It seems that it's 'all or nothing'. He promised a muslim immigration ban. He landed on a 3 month pause with the 7 most dangerous countries so as to improve vetting.

    He promised to deport all 12 million illegal immigrants. Right now he's focused on stopping new illegal immigration, and clearing out dangerous criminals from among those already here. After that, if he his policy takes a humanitarian turn towards amnesty for the remaining however many "law-abiding" immigrants, are you really gonna roast the guy for being dishonest??

    He promised to go after Hillary. Upon being elected, he may have decided he had better things to do. You think that makes him dishonest? It's like you're saying that two boxers who fight in a ring, should also be full of hate and want to fight when they see each other in the street.

    If you don't recognize that there are going to be differences between candidates on campaigns, and elected officials serving in office, even when those two are physically teh same person, then you're just not living in reality man.

    I think you're illustrating the stubborn intolerance of the liberal side. They seem to believe that when a candidate is elected, that he then gets to implement his entire platform with impunity. They believe that whoever is president gets to do what he wants...because he won. Obama famously stated that "elections have consequences" and that's how he ran his presidency, and it's a big reason why he was so ineffective once his party lost control of congress. It's why he has a dizzying record number of Executive Orders under his name, and so many of his primary accomplishments are written in sand.

    you see it when democratic lawmakers get on the house floor and rail against republicans for not having a ready-to-go healthcare bill to replace Obamacare. Well....maybe they want some input from the other side. Maybe they're willing to compromise. Maybe they realize that elected officials need to serve ALL the people, not just the ones who voted from them

    If Trump decides to let Hillary off the hook, why should that impugn his credibility? He's taking a position that is popular among ALL americans. Just because it pisses off a sliver of the base that voted for him, doesn't mean he's being a bad president, or a phony candidate by adjusting his position.

    or, even if his position is unchanged, that doesn't mean he's obligated to act. Again, he's faced with the problem of prioritizing an infinite agenda. That means there's gonna be some stuff at the end of the list that doesn't get done.
    Last edited by BananaStand; 02-06-2017 at 12:01 PM.
  49. #5224
    I, and millions of others, watched the inauguration on mediums not included in the "facts" presented by the MSM. It takes alternative facts to include us.
  50. #5225
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    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    See bolded. Alternative facts.

    If everyone hates his ideas so much....how did he become President??
    Not by winning the popular vote though
    My dream... is to fly... over the rainbow... so high...


    Cogito ergo sum

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  51. #5226
    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    A loser who won?
    Nixon won, still a loser.


    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    That's some alternative facts right there my friend.
    Nope, it's an opinion. Though it's probably as close to the truth as many of your facts.


    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    And maybe some of us choose to make our voices heard in ways that actually matter instead of screaming on a street corner like hysterical idiots. Your local and regional newspapers publish editorials submitted by readers. Your senator or congressman will read the letters you send them.
    I'm sure posting things on poker forums is a much better way to support your president than organising a mass rally.
  52. #5227
    Quote Originally Posted by Jack Sawyer View Post
    Not by winning the popular vote though
    Good thing we have smarter ways of deciding who gets to run shit.
  53. #5228
    Quote Originally Posted by wufwugy View Post
    I, and millions of others, watched the inauguration on mediums not included in the "facts" presented by the MSM. It takes alternative facts to include us.
    Well so what? Does everyone who watched the inauguration automatically become a supporter? Half of those watching prolly just tuned in to see if he'd fuck up the swearing in or grab his daughter's ass.

    I watch a monkey swing around in a zoo, doesn't mean I support the monkey.


    Quote Originally Posted by wufwugy View Post
    It takes alternative facts to include us.
    No, it takes guessing and filling in the blanks in whatever way suits you.
  54. #5229
    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    Nixon won, still a loser.
    Seems like you're unclear on the definition of loser. If you wanna call Nixon dishonest, crooked, or any of several other derogatory but apt terms, go ahead. But that doesn't change the fact that he emerged victorious in contests of politics.

    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    Nope, it's an opinion. Though it's probably as close to the truth as many of your facts.
    No sir, the definitions of words are not matters of opinion. When there are contests, the victors are called "winners", the defeated are called "losers". SURELY you don't expect me to determine the difference between when you're being bombastic, and when you should be taken literally.

    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    I'm sure posting things on poker forums is a much better way to support your president than organising a mass rally.
    Thought we weren't playing that ad hominem game?
  55. #5230
    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    Well excuse me if I just don't see your point. Yes, there is a difference between candidate Trump and President Trump. Welcome to American politics. I don't see why that shocks or offends anyone. It happened plenty with all 44 previous presidents, so why is it such a crime when Trump does it too.

    It's merely a symptom of prioritizing an infinite agenda. A problem faced by every president, ever.


    You can't please all of the people all of the time. If anyone is having their cake and eating it too, it's the folks trying to push this narrative that impugns Trump for not doing everything he said, exactly the way he said it. They want a moderate president, but they criticize Trump for being moderate.

    Obama promised to end wars in the middle east. We're still there. He promised to close Gitmo, it's still open. He promised comprehensive health care reform. It was written in sand, and is poised to be washed away by the tide in the next 6 months. Obama made progress on all of those things, but clearly fell short of the goal.

    This is the liberal bias. Obama can show partial results, or make excuses, or blame republicans. Trump is afforded no such luxuries. It seems that it's 'all or nothing'. He promised a muslim immigration ban. He landed on a 3 month pause with the 7 most dangerous countries so as to improve vetting.

    He promised to deport all 12 million illegal immigrants. Right now he's focused on stopping new illegal immigration, and clearing out dangerous criminals from among those already here. After that, if he his policy takes a humanitarian turn towards amnesty for the remaining however many "law-abiding" immigrants, are you really gonna roast the guy for being dishonest??

    He promised to go after Hillary. Upon being elected, he may have decided he had better things to do. You think that makes him dishonest? It's like you're saying that two boxers who fight in a ring, should also be full of hate and want to fight when they see each other in the street.

    If you don't recognize that there are going to be differences between candidates on campaigns, and elected officials serving in office, even when those two are physically teh same person, then you're just not living in reality man.

    I think you're illustrating the stubborn intolerance of the liberal side. They seem to believe that when a candidate is elected, that he then gets to implement his entire platform with impunity. They believe that whoever is president gets to do what he wants...because he won. Obama famously stated that "elections have consequences" and that's how he ran his presidency, and it's a big reason why he was so ineffective once his party lost control of congress. It's why he has a dizzying record number of Executive Orders under his name, and so many of his primary accomplishments are written in sand.

    you see it when democratic lawmakers get on the house floor and rail against republicans for not having a ready-to-go healthcare bill to replace Obamacare. Well....maybe they want some input from the other side. Maybe they're willing to compromise. Maybe they realize that elected officials need to serve ALL the people, not just the ones who voted from them

    If Trump decides to let Hillary off the hook, why should that impugn his credibility? He's taking a position that is popular among ALL americans. Just because it pisses off a sliver of the base that voted for him, doesn't mean he's being a bad president, or a phony candidate by adjusting his position.

    or, even if his position is unchanged, that doesn't mean he's obligated to act. Again, he's faced with the problem of prioritizing an infinite agenda. That means there's gonna be some stuff at the end of the list that doesn't get done.

    Hey, it's not me who's defending him. I don't watch him hoping he follows through on all his idiotic promises. I've been arguing most of these are bad ideas. I'd think more of him if he didn't try to ban muslims or jail his political opponents. Sorry if you've confused me with someone else.
  56. #5231
    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    Well so what? Does everyone who watched the inauguration automatically become a supporter? Half of those watching prolly just tuned in to see if he'd fuck up the swearing in or grab his daughter's ass.

    I watch a monkey swing around in a zoo, doesn't mean I support the monkey.
    Wait, when did the question about crowd size translate to support? Either it was the most watched, or it wasn't.

    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    No, it takes guessing and filling in the blanks in whatever way suits you.
    Do you realize how delusional and stubborn this sounds? It's like you're walking into a building as you see dark clouds rolling in, coming back out to find the ground is soaked, then saying "That doesn't prove it rained"
  57. #5232
    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    Seems like you're unclear on the definition of loser. If you wanna call Nixon dishonest, crooked, or any of several other derogatory but apt terms, go ahead. But that doesn't change the fact that he emerged victorious in contests of politics.

    No sir, the definitions of words are not matters of opinion. When there are contests, the victors are called "winners", the defeated are called "losers". SURELY you don't expect me to determine the difference between when you're being bombastic, and when you should be taken literally.
    No sir, you don't get to decide the frame of reference for how I use a word. Nixon can well be considered a loser in the larger frame of reference, having been impeached and tossed out of office in disgrace.

    You can think he's a winner if you want because he won the election. But that's your choice to use that narrow frame of reference. Just like it's mine to use a broader frame which includes what he did once elected.


    Thought we weren't playing that ad hominem game?[/QUOTE]

    It's not ad hominen; it speaks perfectly to your argument that the people out protesting in the streets are wasting their time.
  58. #5233
    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    It's like you're walking into a building as you see dark clouds rolling in, coming back out to find the ground is soaked, then saying "That doesn't prove it rained"
    It's not even close to the same thing. Nice try though.

    Anyone who denies it rained when the evidence is visible in front of their eyes is delusional. Anyone who says you can't infer a certain number of people watched Trump on alternative media just because such media exists and at least somebody watched it is simply stating an obvious truth.

    A better analogy would be if you argued billions worldwide watched a solar eclipse. If I said 'how do you know it's billions?', and you said 'something something you're delusional if you don't think it's billions', as if that were the most obvious fact ever.
  59. #5234
    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    Hey, it's not me who's defending him. I don't watch him hoping he follows through on all his idiotic promises. I've been arguing most of these are bad ideas.
    I don't think anyone here has stated they are in love with the guy's entire playbook. You can't please all of the people all of the time. But just because I don't pile on the guy at every turn doesn't mean I'm some kind of apologist.

    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    I'd think more of him if he didn't try to ban muslims or jail his political opponents. Sorry if you've confused me with someone else.
    See, either you're being deliberately incendiary, or you're ignorant of the issues. An immigration pause on 7 countries is not a "muslim ban". There are still some 40 something muslim-majority countries that are not impacted in the slightest. There is no religious component to the travel ban whatsoever. You're simply using the term "muslim ban" to make it sound worse than it is. Either that, or you're so poorly acquainted with the facts, that you believe what's happening is worse than it is.
  60. #5235
    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    Wait, when did the question about crowd size translate to support?
    Well, isn't that why little Donald was so upset he sent his press secretary out to yell at the media? Because they had pictures showing such a tiny crowd went to his inauguration relative to Obamas? My viewing of the situation was precisely that.
  61. #5236
    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    I don't think anyone here has stated they are in love with the guy's entire playbook. You can't please all of the people all of the time. But just because I don't pile on the guy at every turn doesn't mean I'm some kind of apologist.
    For someone who's not an apologist,you sure spend a lot of time defending him.


    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    See, either you're being deliberately incendiary, or you're ignorant of the issues. An immigration pause on 7 countries is not a "muslim ban". There are still some 40 something muslim-majority countries that are not impacted in the slightest. There is no religious component to the travel ban whatsoever. You're simply using the term "muslim ban" to make it sound worse than it is. Either that, or you're so poorly acquainted with the facts, that you believe what's happening is worse than it is.
    He called for a muslim ban during his campaign. Now who's being deliberately ignorant?
  62. #5237
    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    Anyone who denies it rained when the evidence is visible in front of their eyes is delusional.
    Sprinklers yo!

    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    Anyone who says you can't infer a certain number of people watched Trump on alternative media just because such media exists and at least somebody watched it is simply stating an obvious truth.
    Of course you can make that inference. Have you ever bought anything from a telemarketer? I haven't. I don't know anyone who says they have. I know far more people who are bothered by the call. So does that mean that no one buys things over the phone? Or is it safe to infer that they wouldn't do it if it didn't work?

    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    A better analogy would be if you argued billions worldwide watched a solar eclipse. If I said 'how do you know it's billions?', and you said 'something something you're delusional if you don't think it's billions', as if that were the most obvious fact ever.
    It is the most obvious fact ever. In order for it not to be true, you would need to assume that billions of people, with the ability to see, ignored a glowing ball of gas a million times the size of the earth that enters their field of vision dozens of times per day.

    The measured stats are off by a mere 500K viewers out of a total of some 17-ish million. You can either infer that at least 500,000 people watched it on unmeasured media, or less than 500,000 people watched it on unmeasured media. Making the latter inference there means you ignore the last decade of technological advancement and known trends regarding the amount of eyeballs that use the internet.
  63. #5238
    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    For someone who's not an apologist,you sure spend a lot of time defending him.
    Confirmation bias. You're reading what you want to read from me. When he's gone wrong, I've stated such. I'm a staunch opponent of the wall. I thought the travel ban was poorly communicated down through the chain of command. And I think he was wrong to threaten to revoke federal funds from UC Berkely. All of those dissensions are documented in this forum.

    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    He called for a muslim ban during his campaign. Now who's being deliberately ignorant?
    You are. How do you not recognize the fact that a candidate and a president can and should have different perspectives.

    This is liberals talking out of both sides of their mouth. They didn't like the "muslim ban" proposed by Candidate Trump. They want a less extreme policy. So when Trump obliges but implementing a less extreme policy, one side of their mouth says "Nope, we're still gonna call it a muslim ban, and focus on a non-existent religious component". The other side of their mouth says "well, Trump's not doing what he promised to do during the campaign, so he's a just a blowhard who's full of shit"
  64. #5239
    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    Sprinklers yo!
    No sprinklers, you live on a farm.


    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    Of course you can make that inference. Have you ever bought anything from a telemarketer? I haven't. I don't know anyone who says they have. I know far more people who are bothered by the call. So does that mean that no one buys things over the phone? Or is it safe to infer that they wouldn't do it if it didn't work?
    Not the same thing, sorry.


    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    It is the most obvious fact ever. In order for it not to be true, you would need to assume that billions of people, with the ability to see, ignored a glowing ball of gas a million times the size of the earth that enters their field of vision dozens of times per day.
    Thanks for taking the bait. Now, how many of those 'viewers' were at work and thus couldn't see it? How many were on the other side of the Earth where it was nighttime. You can't infer every person on the planet was a potential viewer, or even every person in your own country.



    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    The measured stats are off by a mere 500K viewers out of a total of some 17-ish million. You can either infer that at least 500,000 people watched it on unmeasured media, or less than 500,000 people watched it on unmeasured media. Making the latter inference there means you ignore the last decade of technological advancement and known trends regarding the amount of eyeballs that use the internet.
    Sure, but it's irrelevant anyways. Spicer told a bunch of other lies in that ranting press conference where he took no questions. Those are enough to give him the title of alternative fact king.
  65. #5240
    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    You are. How do you not recognize the fact that a candidate and a president can and should have different perspectives.

    This is liberals talking out of both sides of their mouth. They didn't like the "muslim ban" proposed by Candidate Trump. They want a less extreme policy. So when Trump obliges but implementing a less extreme policy, one side of their mouth says "Nope, we're still gonna call it a muslim ban, and focus on a non-existent religious component". The other side of their mouth says "well, Trump's not doing what he promised to do during the campaign, so he's a just a blowhard who's full of shit"
    No, you're changing what I said again.

    First, I said 'I hope he doesn't keep some of his promises, like the one about the muslim ban and jailing his political opponents.'

    You're response is 'zomg it's not a ban' and blah blah blah for a few paragraphs about why it's not a ban.

    And I said, 'he argued for a ban in his campaign'

    And now you're argument is 'he doesn't have to keep all his promises to be a good president'.

    I mean, no offense, but you can't even seem to keep it straight in your head from one post to the next what you're arguing about.
  66. #5241
    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    Thanks for taking the bait. Now, how many of those 'viewers' were at work and thus couldn't see it
    What bait? If this is a "trap" its pretty weak sauce. In America, only some 40% of the population "works". I dont' have the stats in front of me, but I'll bet that's at least average, if not towards the high-end world wide.

    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    How many were on the other side of the Earth where it was nighttime.
    C'mon man, you're being silly. I'm aware that the earth rotates. Again, this "trap" you set is sad.

    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    You can't infer every person on the planet was a potential viewer, or even every person in your own country
    Yes, you can. Half the planet is bathed in sunlight, and less than half of that population has to go to work at any given time. And even among that population, a lot work out side and even more have windows. Eclipses are rare. They're also predicted, which means people are aware of them when they happen. For the inference to be proven false, you'd have to demonstrate that billions of people purposefully avoided a historic celestial event that would be nearly impossible to avoid if you have eyes and spent more than 2 seconds looking at the sky. That assumption would be preposterous, hence it's reasonable to infer the opposite.

    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    Sure, but it's irrelevant anyways. Spicer told a bunch of other lies in that ranting press conference where he took no questions. Those are enough to give him the title of alternative fact king.
    Why do you call them "lies"? Do you think that they knew for sure that subway rides were lower, but reported them higher anyway? They KNOW the press is just waiting to catch them in any kind of nonsense, why would they deliberately walk into that? The guy was given the wrong numbers, he reported them as the right numbers, and then corrected himself the next day. That's called a mistake. You did the same thing to Fox News last week. You seem to equate mistakes with lies whenever it suits your narrative. People aren't perfect man.
  67. #5242
    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    Why do you call them "lies"? Do you think that they knew for sure that subway rides were lower, but reported them higher anyway? They KNOW the press is just waiting to catch them in any kind of nonsense, why would they deliberately walk into that? The guy was given the wrong numbers, he reported them as the right numbers, and then corrected himself the next day. That's called a mistake. You did the same thing to Fox News last week. You seem to equate mistakes with lies whenever it suits your narrative. People aren't perfect man.
    They don't care if they caught lying because they're supporters will forgive them, just like Fox News.

    Also, you seem to lack a basic understanding of how propaganda works. You tell a lie, and as long as it's the first 'fact' someone gets, they're more likely to keep believing it even when faced with contrary evidence.
  68. #5243
    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    Do you think that they knew for sure that subway rides were lower, but reported them higher anyway?
    Of course they did. It's not as if the met accidentally posted the 'wrong' numbers. Lol, Spicer pulled those numbers straight out of Trump's ass.
  69. #5244
    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    No, you're changing what I said again.
    No, you're talking in circles.

    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    First, I said 'I hope he doesn't keep some of his promises, like the one about the muslim ban and jailing his political opponents.'
    So you got your wish!!!! So why this:
    The 'myth' was that he would try to impose a bunch of laws people didn't want. The fact that the most egregious of these was stopped (at least temporarily) doesn't remove the danger of him trying.

    It also seems quite likely that, like so many Trumpers have said, they believed he should be taken seriously but not literally. I think a lot of them never thought he would go through with a lot of his crazier sounding ideas. Now they're seeing the light.

    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    You're response is 'zomg it's not a ban' and blah blah blah for a few paragraphs about why it's not a ban.
    I think it's important for you to realize that you got your wish. He implemented a different policy than a muslim ban. You still seem upset at an imaginary policy suggested during a campaign, and are equating it with a much more moderate policy implemented by a president. It's important that you get this.

    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    And I said, 'he argued for a ban in his campaign'
    So? Now he's obligated to that exact policy, with no compromises, forever? It's AMAZING to me that people think like this and call Trump a fascist.

    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    And now you're argument is 'he doesn't have to keep all his promises to be a good president'.
    NO. To be a good president he has to serve ALL the people, not just the ones who voted for him. Often times, that means compromises. Trump eliminated any kind of religious component, which was the main complaint against the policy he suggested in his campaign. The policy he actually implemented was limited in scope, temporary, and addressed the concerns of his opposition. So, what's your beef?

    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    I mean, no offense, but you can't even seem to keep it straight in your head from one post to the next what you're arguing about.
    I can see why you think that when you yourself are thinking in circles and twisting my words at the same time. How do you keep anything straight?
  70. #5245
    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    No, you're talking in circles.


    So you got your wish!!!! So why this:




    I think it's important for you to realize that you got your wish. He implemented a different policy than a muslim ban. You still seem upset at an imaginary policy suggested during a campaign, and are equating it with a much more moderate policy implemented by a president. It's important that you get this.


    So? Now he's obligated to that exact policy, with no compromises, forever? It's AMAZING to me that people think like this and call Trump a fascist.


    NO. To be a good president he has to serve ALL the people, not just the ones who voted for him. Often times, that means compromises. Trump eliminated any kind of religious component, which was the main complaint against the policy he suggested in his campaign. The policy he actually implemented was limited in scope, temporary, and addressed the concerns of his opposition. So, what's your beef?


    I can see why you think that when you yourself are thinking in circles and twisting my words at the same time. How do you keep anything straight?

    Ok, whatever you say.
  71. #5246
    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    Ok, whatever you say.
    So, can you explain to me why you have a problem with Trump compromising and backing off from an extreme policy that you hated to begin with? Can you explain why people who didn't take Trump literally at every turn should now "see the light"?

    Because earlier, it was pretty clear that you were equating the actual travel ban policy with a hypothetical 'muslim ban' policy presented during the campaign.

    If a president decides to take the least disruptive course of action (it's only 7 countries, and it's temporary), how is that, in your words "egregious", or "dangerous"?

    It seems like you're equating the moderate policy with an extreme one. Rather than admit that the president is not the fascist monster you thought he was, you now seem to be saying that this moderate policy is just the first step toward the extreme policy.

    The fact that the most egregious of these was stopped (at least temporarily) doesn't remove the danger of him trying.
    Last edited by BananaStand; 02-06-2017 at 03:44 PM.
  72. #5247
    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    So, can you explain to me why you have a problem with Trump compromising and backing off from an extreme policy that you hated to begin with? Can you explain why people who didn't take Trump literally at every turn should now "see the light"?

    Because earlier, it was pretty clear that you were equating the actual travel ban policy with a hypothetical 'muslim ban' policy presented during the campaign.

    If a president decides to take the least disruptive course of action (it's only 7 countries, and it's temporary), how is that, in your words "egregious", or "dangerous"?

    It seems like you're equating the moderate policy with an extreme one. Rather than admit that the president is not the fascist monster you thought he was, you now seem to be saying that this moderate policy is just the first step toward the extreme policy.

    How do you see it as anything other than a muslim ban is a better question. It's aimed specifically at 7 muslim majority countries.

    Guiliani as much as said Trump asked him for advice on putting in the muslim ban. Does this sound like someone who's taking a compromise position?

    Finally, you do realise the ban was overturned by the court as unconstitutional because it is based on religion? How do you reconcile that with it not being a 'muslim ban'?

    Better obviously would have been not to try the muslim ban in any shape or form in the first place.
  73. #5248
    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    How do you see it as anything other than a muslim ban is a better question. It's aimed specifically at 7 muslim majority countries.
    If it were religious based, there wouldn't be 40 plus muslim-majority countries that are totally unaffected. Are Christians, Jews, and Buddhists allowed to travel to and from Yemen under this policy?

    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    Guiliani as much as said Trump asked him for advice on putting in the muslim ban. Does this sound like someone who's taking a compromise position?
    Sounds like he's getting advice from smart people on how to implement something that's realistic. So...to answer your question...yes

    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    Finally, you do realise the ban was overturned by the court as unconstitutional because it is based on religion? How do you reconcile that with it not being a 'muslim ban'?
    Alternative facts my friend.

    First of all, it was not "overturned", it was halted through a "temporary restraining order". There is a difference. Second, the judge didn't make any ruling whatsoever on the constitutionality of the order. And therefore, he certainly didn't reference freedom of religion in his decision.

    In order to grant the restraining order, he only had to determine 1) Plaintiffs are likely to succeed at a later date, 2) people in those states (washington and minnesota) will suffer irreparable harm if the order continues. And 3) the restraining order serves public interest.

    Those are some extremely vague and broad criteria. He simply ruled that there was more harm than good by allowing the order to continue until the full case could be heard. His ruling is nowhere near the final say on this.

    You know, lawyers have a saying that if you present a case enough times, to enough juries or judges, you can indict a ham sandwich. Dems went shopping for a restraining order and found a judge willing to cooperate with a temporary one until the full case could be heard. That's nowhere near a determination of constitutionality.

    Where are you getting your information?????

    A cherry picked judge making a highly subjective determination and issuing an order, the likes of which typically expire in 14 days, is a LOOOOOONG way from declaring the Executive Order as "unconstitutional". You're watching too much CNN maybe?

    Funny, when Dems have a problem, they can demand a temporary, but immediate pause to the action until the details on further action can be sorted out. Does that strike anyone else as ironic? I mean, REALLY ironic?

    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    Better obviously would have been not to try the muslim ban in any shape or form in the first place.
    Yeah, cause that's working so well in Europe right now.
    Last edited by BananaStand; 02-06-2017 at 04:25 PM.
  74. #5249
    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    If it were religious based, there wouldn't be 40 plus muslim-majority countries that are totally unaffected. Are Christians, Jews, and Buddhists allowed to travel to and from Yemen under this policy?
    It's still a muslim ban since it's aimed at countries that are primarily muslim. If there were a way to ban only the muslims, I'm guessing Trump would have tried it.


    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    Sounds like he's getting advice from smart people on how to implement something that's realistic. So...to answer your question...yes
    Lol, sure, he 'compromised' by asking another far-righter how to implement it. That's a pretty generous interpretation of the word.


    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post

    First of all, it was not "overturned", it was halted through a "temporary restraining order". There is a difference. Second, the judge didn't make any ruling whatsoever on the constitutionality of the order. And therefore, he certainly didn't reference freedom of religion in his decision.

    In order to grant the restraining order, he only had to determine 1) Plaintiffs are likely to succeed at a later date, 2) people in those states (washington and minnesota) will suffer irreparable harm if the order continues. And 3) the restraining order serves public interest.

    Those are some extremely vague and broad criteria. He simply ruled that there was more harm than good by allowing the order to continue until the full case could be heard. His ruling is nowhere near the final say on this.
    It was presented by the lawyers as unconstitutional. Judge thought their case would win, so he gave a temporary restraining order. Pretty simple to understand on what basis the order was granted, since the ban is clearly based on religion.




    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    Yeah, cause that's working so well in Europe right now.
    There's certain countries where it's working out very well. Canada for example, who by the way offered to take in all the refugees Trump wants to turn away.

    Some places took too many, like Germany, and of course there's going to be problems when you try to take in hundreds of thousands of refugees. That doesn't mean it was wrong of them to care about those people and try to help them.

    Obviously it's a value judgment. If you want your country to stand only for itself, then you shouldn't give any foreign aid or accept any refugees. But if you want your country to be a leader in the world, you should be willing to help the world.
  75. #5250
    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    It's still a muslim ban since it's aimed at countries that are primarily muslim.
    NO! It's aimed at countries where governments are either not centralized, hence they cannot provide the necessary vetting data, or more simply, their governments are just not cooperative.

    Just because there is a common thread among the 7 countries, doesn't mean THAT is the criteria used. Tell me, what do YOU think differentiates those 7 countries from the other 40-something majority-muslim countries in the world? If it's a muslim ban, and the policy is religious based, then why did we stop so short?

    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    If there were a way to ban only the muslims, I'm guessing Trump would have tried it.
    You can read the guy's mind now?

    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    Lol, sure, he 'compromised' by asking another far-righter how to implement it. That's a pretty generous interpretation of the word.
    Holy shit man, in what universe is Giuliani a "far-righter"? How in the world could such a person be elected mayor in NYC?

    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    It was presented by the lawyers as unconstitutional. Judge thought their case would win, so he gave a temporary restraining order. Pretty simple to understand on what basis the order was granted, since the ban is clearly based on religion.
    Now you're reading judge's minds too? If this judge didn't grant the restraining order, they would have tried again until they found a judge who would. C'mon man, you know they can indict a ham sandwich if they want to. This guy was cherry-picked, and the criteria for the ruling is hugely subjective, broad, and vague. You're seeing things that aren't there again.

    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    There's certain countries where it's working out very well. Canada for example, who by the way offered to take in all the refugees Trump wants to turn away.
    It's not working out well in Canada. They tried to pass legislation to ban hijabs. That doesn't sound like a place where Muslims are very welcome. And I don't know what you mean by "working out well". How do you know that everyone admitted into canada is one of the "good guys"? The lack of an overt attack doesn't validate the quality of security.

    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    Some places took too many, like Germany, and of course there's going to be problems when you try to take in hundreds of thousands of refugees. That doesn't mean it was wrong of them to care about those people and try to help them.
    Too many? Exactly how many is too many? Put a number on it please?

    It only took ONE guy to get into a truck and drive over a sidewalk full of people. That means if you only admit ONE immigrant into your country, there is a non-zero chance you'll be attacked.

    I agree, 99.9% of those hundreds of thousands of people are probably totally ok. But it only takes ONE bad guy for us to have a problem. And if we're saying we can come up with measures to catch that ONE guy among hundreds of thousands, shouldn't we do it? Is a three month lead time really too much to ask?

    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    Obviously it's a value judgment. If you want your country to stand only for itself, then you shouldn't give any foreign aid or accept any refugees. But if you want your country to be a leader in the world, you should be willing to help the world.
    Who says we're unwilling to help the world? We just want 3 months to help ourselves develop the best security possible for our citizens, and then we'll open the doors back up to the world again.

    I swear, every time a liberal argument is thwarted, they invent five new ones out of thin air. Preposterous assumptions, mind reading, conjecture, international disdain.....what else ya got?
    Last edited by BananaStand; 02-06-2017 at 04:56 PM.

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